- “Search the internet for yesterday’s main news about AI and bring me a report every day at 9:00 a.m.”
- “At the beginning of every month, generate a PDF report on the company’s sales, broken down by channels, main metrics, etc.”
What Scheduling is
Scheduling is Tess’s ability to run a task automatically, without you having to ask again. You define:1. THE TASK
What must be done
What must be done
2. FREQUENCY
When it should run
When it should run
3. SETTINGS
Context/execution used
Context/execution used
Scheduling is executed via an agent (that is, it’s especially powerful when combined with Agent Mode and Tools such as Internet, Manage Files, Deep Analysis, etc.).
Why it matters
Automated routine
You turn repetitive tasks into automation, working on daily/weekly/monthly reports; monitoring topics and news; consolidating metrics; periodic checks.
Fewer lapses and more consistency
Once scheduled, it always runs at the defined time.
High operational impact
For CS/Revenue/Marketing/Product teams, this enables use cases such as:
- recurring usage reports
- feedback summaries
- metric tracking
- smart alerts (when combined with data/integrations)
How Scheduling works
Today, scheduling runs using the chat settings and works with the settings from the first message of the chat (not necessarily from the specific message where you asked for the schedule). If you want to change settings (e.g., model, agent mode, tools), today the most reliable path is to start a new conversation and set everything up again before scheduling. Automation is tool-driven:- With Internet: research and monitoring
- With Manage Files: generate/edit PDFs, documents, and presentations
- With Deep Analysis: recurring analysis on spreadsheets/CSV
- With Integrations: trigger external actions (with the proper security care)
Configure the chat before asking for the schedule
Choose the mode (Standard Chat or Agent Mode), the model (LLM), and the necessary tools (Internet, etc.). Leave the chat’s initial context “the right way”.
Describe the task clearly
Include the objective, output format (bullet points, PDF, table, etc.), frequency and time (daily, weekly, monthly, every X minutes), sources and criteria (if it’s internet: topics, keywords, regions, language).

